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Raven 08-14-2018 11:26 AM

DEAD SEALS Lots
 
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DZ 08-14-2018 12:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Raven (Post 1148851)
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Recent?

puppet 08-14-2018 12:18 PM

may be a sign of maximum population limits....a numbers vs resource...or perhaps a biological factor like red tide or virus in the colony.

I hate the stink those critters put off when rotting on the beach. The last time I fished the cape it had quite a few washed up.

DZ 08-14-2018 12:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by puppet (Post 1148853)
may be a sign of maximum population limits....a numbers vs resource...or perhaps a biological factor like red tide or virus in the colony.

Just read the article and it mentions a similarity to a 2011 kill when the cause was a form of Avian Flu. I keep saying that nature's way of controlling the overpopulation of seals is the only hope for relief.

Pete F. 08-14-2018 02:14 PM

I think they can also get canine distemper, I remember reading about a mass die off in the North Sea.

Nebe 08-14-2018 02:58 PM

Fire up the stew pot
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spence 08-14-2018 05:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Nebe (Post 1148858)
Fire up the stew pot
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Go find the Anthony Bourdain episode he did with an Inuit family. At the end everyone is sitting on the kitchen floor covered in seal blood feasting away. It's awesome.

Nebe 08-14-2018 05:23 PM

Ive eaten seal before. It was good.
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Nebe 08-14-2018 05:23 PM

You can really get Inuit
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Jim in CT 08-14-2018 08:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Nebe (Post 1148872)
You can really get Inuit
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that was great.
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Nebe 08-14-2018 08:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jim in CT (Post 1148882)
that was great.
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Taken from the great joke - I’ve had sex with a woman from every ethnic background on the planet except an Eskimo. She just wasn’t Inuit.
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Swimmer 08-15-2018 06:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Nebe (Post 1148883)
Taken from the great joke - I’ve had sex with a woman from every ethnic background on the planet except an Eskimo. She just wasn’t Inuit.
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Smiling here Eban :)

ivanputski 08-15-2018 08:57 PM

more please

zimmy 08-15-2018 10:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ivanputski (Post 1148925)
more please

Dead seals or inuit jokes 😂
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Raven 08-16-2018 04:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DZ (Post 1148852)
Recent?

yeah they suddenly washed ashore the other day

so -> good reason to celibrate :cheers2:

Nebe 08-16-2018 07:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ivanputski (Post 1148925)
more please

Well...there was that time that the penguin’s car was running like crap so he went to his walrus friend who was a mechanic... I’m sure you know the rest.
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MakoMike 08-24-2018 11:33 AM

Another article about this [URL="http://www.gloucestertimes.com/news/fishing_industry_news/scientists-eye-flu-pollution-in-spike-in-seal-deaths/article_b527dbaa-bc20-5bd4-aff9-cb595ec1b190.html"][/URLhttp://www.gloucestertimes.com/news/fishing_industry_news/scientists-eye-flu-pollution-in-spike-in-seal-deaths/article_b527dbaa-bc20-5bd4-aff9-cb595ec1b190.html

piemma 08-24-2018 02:09 PM

So here's my theory. We get The Back Beaches back and one of these numskulls that are ruining the Canal find out there are Fish! Next thing you know the Mission Bell will turn into a 3rd World Country.

milo 08-24-2018 07:57 PM

Don’t think they will drive that far and fish at night, Canal is easy fishing compared to the beaches
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saltfly 08-25-2018 05:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by piemma (Post 1149596)
So here's my theory. We get The Back Beaches back and one of these numskulls that are ruining the Canal find out there are Fish! Next thing you know the Mission Bell will turn into a 3rd World Country.

Nah...It takes effort to walk and money,4wd,etc. But you never know.:call::call::call:post it and see what happens.

5/0 08-26-2018 08:30 AM

Sooo sad,add-em up with piping plovers which = great stew.💩
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MakoMike 08-26-2018 01:12 PM

Initial tests of dead seals found in Maine and New Hampshire reveal avian flu and distemper Story at: https://www.boston.com/news/local-ne...-new-hampshire

MakoMike 09-24-2018 01:51 PM

Not just us that have pinniped problems:
Sea Lions And Orcas Battle It Out In Puget Sound
by Jason Buch Crosscut Sept. 11, 2018 11:33 a.m. | Updated: Sept. 14, 2018 9:18 a.m.
By Jason Buch/Crosscut

In the early 1980s, a group of recreational fishermen dropping lines near the Hiram M. Chittenden Locks in Ballard, Washington, started complaining about a particularly large and wily California sea lion.

The shore anglers had good reason to be annoyed. Each time they hooked a fish, this sea lion would pop up and eat it off their line.

In this March 14, 2018, file photo, a California sea lion waits to be released into the Pacific Ocean in Newport, Oregon.
In this March 14, 2018, file photo, a California sea lion waits to be released into the Pacific Ocean in Newport, Oregon.

Don Ryan/AP
The sea lion, nicknamed Herschel by the fishermen, quickly moved on from taking fish off lines to gobbling up steelhead as they tried to make it over the ladder south of the locks. Here, water sluices down stair-stepped pools and migrating fish jump from pool to pool until they reach the Lake Union Ship Canal and spawning grounds beyond. Herschel found that by hanging out under the fish ladder he could gorge himself on steelhead trying to make it upstream.

Over the next few years, it became apparent that Herschel and a handful of other large male sea lions were seriously depleting the winter steelhead run, putting the population that spawns in Lake Washington’s tributaries at risk of extinction.

California sea lions spend part of the year at breeding sites on the Channel Islands. The bulls that feed at the bottom of fish ladders, where salmon practically swim down their gullets, have a distinct advantage in their battles for mates and territory.

“If you were a sea lion and you wanted to bulk up, you’d eat these adult fish that are all fat and full of eggs,” said Steven Jeffries, a research scientist and marine mammal specialist for the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. “Their caloric content is off the charts.”

Herschel” on navigation buoy in Shilshole Bay circa 1984.
Herschel” on navigation buoy in Shilshole Bay circa 1984.

Courtesy of NOAA

By the mid-1980s, Herschel had disappeared. The rumor was he’d been shot — perhaps by a vengeful angler — but his absence didn’t have much impact. Over the next 10 years, more than 30 California sea lions were seen eating migrating salmon and steelhead near the locks. The largest and most voracious, a 1,200-pounder named Hondo, clocked in at 400 pounds more than what was thought at the time to be the maximum weight for his species.
The question of what to do about Hondo and his compatriots, who were protected under federal law, reverberated around Seattle, Washington State and eventually the U.S. Congress.

More than 30 years later, the debate continues over how to handle predation on endangered and threatened fish stocks by pinnipeds, a group of marine mammals that includes seals and sea lions. Now there’s more than angry fishermen to appease: Pinniped numbers have increased so much that they are getting some of the blame for the decline of resident orcas in the Pacific Northwest. In a strange situation that pits Puget Sound’s protected marine mammals against each other, some conservationists are weighing whether there is enough salmon to feed orcas and pinnipeds.

Hundreds of sea lions now congregate in the Columbia River and its tributaries, decimating salmon runs that migrate upstream into Washington and Idaho. Over the last 10 years, state resource managers have killed nearly 200 animals near the Bonneville Dam in Oregon, and they’re asking for permission to lethally remove them in other parts of the river.

Meanwhile, proposals to kill off harbor seals in Puget Sound that failed to gain traction in the past are now being taken more seriously. One of three breakout sessions during the Aug. 28 meeting of Gov. Jay Inslee’s task force to save the dwindling southern resident killer whales focused exclusively on proposals to reduce salmon predation by pinnipeds, which compete for food with fish-eating orca pods. The widely reported death of a southern resident calf, and the subsequent two weeks of grieving by its mother has increased the urgency to take drastic steps to save the southern residents. Killing pinnipeds, however, remains controversial.

Harbor seals feed more often on juvenile salmon than adults, and studies have found they eat more individual fish than any other predator. Orcas consume the most salmon biomass —- they eat fewer individual salmon, but the fish they eat are older and larger. Sea lions eat less biomass than the orcas, but state resource managers say they have a particularly detrimental impact on salmon populations because they eat spawning adults at fish ladders.

Willie Frank III, a Nisqually Tribal Council member, said he’s watched pinnipeds move farther up the tribe’s namesake river in recent years. The summer chinook, fall coho and winter chum runs are all depleted, and fisheries managers have limited the number of days the Nisqually can use their gill nets. But while the salmon have decreased, harbor seals have increased. They swim up the river and eat fish right out of the nets. Sometimes Nisqually fishermen will find only salmon heads left by seals. On a recent Sunday, fishing began at noon and by 4 p.m. Frank said his family had lost 10 chinook to seals.

“The seals and sea lion that are eating salmon are affecting our fishermen that have been fishing down here their whole lives,” Frank said. “We’re rich with fishermen down here. Our elders are fishing well into their 80s.”

A chinook head left behind by harbor seals.
A chinook head left behind by harbor seals.

Willie Frank III
A number of conservation groups remain strongly opposed to killing the protected marine mammals. They point out that humans have contributed to salmon stocks’ decline and say pinnipeds shouldn’t suffer the consequences. The removal of seals and sea lions could have unintended and unexpected impacts across the ecosystem, including removing the primary food source for the mammal-eating transient killer whales.
In the 1980s, Jeffries was working with wildlife managers experimenting with underwater speakers to chase sea lions out of the mouth of the Columbia River. After learning of sea lion predation on the winter steelhead run, they moved to Ballard.

When the speakers were blasting noise at 205 decibels underwater, the sea lions swam with their heads above the surface. When wildlife managers tried to put netting across the canal below the locks, Hondo and his buddies hauled out of the water and waddled around the barrier. Wildlife managers have tried harassing sea lions with fire crackers, shooting them with rubber-tipped arrows and trapping and moving sea lions as far away as California. Nothing has worked.

“It’s a challenge trying to outsmart them,” Jeffries said.

At the time, the 1972 Marine Mammal Protection Act prevented the state from killing sea lions. Bounties offered by western states to protect fish stocks in the 20th Century drove pinniped populations dangerously low. In 1994, in response to the severe reduction of the Ballard winter steelhead run, Congress amended the law to allow the killing of problem pinnipeds. Since they’ve been protected, California sea lions have rebounded from fewer than 90,000 in the 1970s to nearly 300,000 today. Harbor seals have undergone a similar recovery, as have Steller sea lions, although those northern cousins of Herschel and Hondo are less often involved in confrontations with humans over fish.

In addition to the permit for lethal removals at the Bonneville Dam nearly 150 miles upstream from the Pacific Ocean, Oregon has asked for permission to kill sea lions below Willamette Falls. Officials say they’re ready to start trapping and killing during the November steelhead run if the federal government approves that request.

Proponents of removing sea lions say the animals are behaving unnaturally and are outside their historic ranges. There’s little historical record of sea lions traveling up the Columbia River and sparse archeological evidence as well.

But opponents say removing pinnipeds is a man-made solution to a man-made problem. Human pollution, overfishing and habitat destruction have all contributed to declining salmon stocks.

Killing sea lions is an attempt at a quick fix that avoids more difficult discussions around dam removal or reducing human catch limits, said Robb Krehbiel, the Northwest representative for Defenders of Wildlife. There’s not enough evidence that killing pinnipeds has an impact on salmon populations, Krehbiel said.

“When we start talking about heavy-handed management of ecosystems, humans often get it wrong,” he said. “The more we try to pick up guns and engineer our way out of the problem, the worse it gets.”

The process of killing pinnipeds under existing federal law is resource intensive. It involves trapping, branding or tagging an animal, releasing it and using non-lethal detterrance. When that fails, state officials try to trap the sea lion again — under federal law they could shoot it, but that method hasn’t been used — and euthanize it.

Bipartisan legislation from a group of lawmakers from Washington, Idaho and Oregon would make it easier for wildlife managers to kill sea lions they encounter more than 112 miles upstream on the Columbia River or one of its tributaries. A version of the bill has already passed the House and a Senate bill by Jim Risch, R-Idaho, was passed out of committee in August.

Wildlife managers can reduce predation of salmon and limit their impact on the sea lion population by removing only the animals that have learned to feed below dams in the Columbia River, said Shaun Clements, senior policy analyst for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife.

“In the Columbia basin, their diet is 99 percent these salmon, steelhead and sturgeon, and essentially it’s not a natural behavior,” Clements said. “Fish didn’t evolve to have that level of predation. You’re just targeting a proportion of the (sea lion) population that’s preying exclusively on salmon, steelhead, sturgeon where they’re available. You’re still leaving 99-plus percent of the population out there.”

Removing harbor seals, which feed at the mouths of rivers and eat juvenile salmon in Puget Sound, presents a very different challenge. After the Aug. 28 meeting, members of the orcas task force said the issue needs more study. It’s not clear how much the seals’ feeding on juveniles impacts total stocks, and there might be non-lethal ways to reduce their predation. Increasing other food sources for seals, removing artificial haulouts near spawning rivers and staging the release of hatchery fish, which draw seals when they enter the sound in large numbers, could reduce predation.

Biologists are concerned that culling large numbers of pinnipeds could have a cascading effect across the ecosystem that goes beyond the transient orcas that eat seals and sea lions. Harbor seals feed on fish like Pacific hake that also eat young salmon.

“My fear is that … others see this as a way to cull animals and remove them from the entire coast,” said Andrew Trites, the director of the Marine Mammal Research Unit at the University of British Columbia. “That concerns me a lot. I think that would be a real tragedy.”

Trites isn’t convinced that seals and sea lions are outside of their historical range today. It’s possible their populations along the West Coast had been depleted by hunting well before white settlers arrived in the area.

“We tend to assume interaction between people and seals started with the arrival of Europeans, but it’s happened for thousands of years,” Trites said. “So there would have been hunting pressure put on the animals, and this is the first time in millenia that we have a chance to go back to an equilibrium.”

But he acknowledges feeding at the dams is having an unnatural impact on salmon populations, and it won’t be easy to return the Columbia and its tributaries to their natural states. Dams in the region are a major source of hydropower and are important for agriculture.

“The trade off may be if you’re going to have dams and locks, you have just have to destroy the animal,” Trites said. “You’ll have some no-go seal and sea lion areas, and it’s the price the population will have to pay to ensure the salmon survive. So in other words, it’s not a fair game. When you put predator and prey at the base of a dam, the dice are loaded in the predator’s favor.”

He cautioned that any killings of pinnipeds need to be carefully studied to gauge their impact. The shooting of about 50 seals in 1997 and 1998 at the mouth of the Puntledge River on Vancouver Island was hailed as a success when the salmon populations increased. But what’s often overlooked is that salmon populations increased at other rivers in the region where no killings occurred, raising questions about whether the Puntledge killings had any impact, Trites said.

Predation on salmon by harbor seals in Puget Sound has resulted in calls to cull the population. But unlike sea lions feeding at fish ladders, which has been widely studied, little is known about the impact harbor seals have on salmon stocks.
Predation on salmon by harbor seals in Puget Sound has resulted in calls to cull the population. But unlike sea lions feeding at fish ladders, which has been widely studied, little is known about the impact harbor seals have on salmon stocks.

Jason Buch/Crosscut
When the Marine Mammal Protection Act was amended in 1994, the state of Washington finally had permission to trap and kill Hondo. A movement to save him materialized, including letter writing campaigns and protests. Instead of being killed, Hondo found himself with a one-way ticket to Florida.
“We were prepared to lethally remove those animals when the SeaWorld corporation said they would accept those six animals,” Jeffries said. “So all the sea lions that were on the list were never lethally removed. We actually caught those animals and loaded them on a DC-10 and SeaWorld paid to have them Fed Exed from SeaTac to Orlando.”

But it was too late to save the winter steelhead run in Ballard. Despite Hondo’s removal, the steelhead population was all but wiped out.

“It dropped below 50 fish, and then once it dropped below 50 fish, the sea lions went away,” Jeffries said. “The lesson we learned from Ballard is if you don’t do anything about seal and sea lion predation, they’ll eat (salmon runs) down to nothing.”

Rmarsh 09-25-2018 06:02 AM

Interesting article Mike.
I fished a spot two nights ago with a dead seal on the beach to the left of me and one to the right. Kept me from going any deeper into the water than my knees....also worried I would trip and face plant on one of them when I went to take a leak.:o

MakoMike 09-25-2018 09:34 AM

http://eastham.wickedlocal.com/news/...inked-to-virus

Gray and harbor seals have lured sharks in increasing numbers into Cape Cod waters, with tragic results, but the burgeoning seal population is taking a hit from viruses.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has issued an unusual mortality event alert for both species of seal in the Gulf of Maine.

From July 1 to Aug. 29 (when the alert was issued) 599 seals were found dead (137) or ill and stranded (462) on New England shores. In the few weeks since that number has soared to 921. Most of those were in Maine (629), with 147 in New Hampshire and 125 in Massachusetts.

The dead or dying seals have been located mostly to the north but a couple were found as far south as Plymouth in Cape Cod Bay.

For comparison the nearly 500 seals found last month is roughly 10 times the number that stranded in August of 2017.

“That is attributed to the influences of disease,” noted Terri Rowles, NOAA’s Marine Mammal Health and Stranding Program coordinator.

“The strandings began with an uptick in July. Those (921) are confirmed cases. There are probably hundreds of unconfirmed cases, which means the animal carcass wasn’t there or there was no blood or it was inaccessible to the stranding network.”

NOAA’s labs have been conducting necropsies on some of the seals.

“The diagnostic labs are working every day to keep up,” Rowles said. “The preliminary results from the seals found that some seals tested positive for phocine distemper, which is related to canine distemper, or avian influenza. Both of those are viruses.”


Phocine distemper was responsible for killing 20,000 gray and harbor seals in Europe in 1988 over eight months, and 30,000 in 2002 – in both cases cutting the population in half. It also caused an increase in deaths in seals in the Gulf of Maine in 2006.

“It’s too soon to know what each virus contributes to the event or if it’s the two together,” Rowles said.

Sick animals are lethargic and coughing on the beach. Because the disease is related to canine distemper people should keep their pets away from beached seals and stay 100 yards away. There’s also some concern the flu could cross over to humans.

The stranded seal hotline is 866-755-6622. Both diseases are respiratory and affect the lungs as well as the brain.

“Distemper seems to have cycles in the population, possibly related to herd immunity,” added Dr. Tracey Goldstein, of the testing lab at the University of California-Davis.

“There was an outbreak on the East Coast in 2011 and as the population of protected seals decreases, the animals are more susceptible to infection. The timing of pupping season means more animals are in dense contact and the virus can expand through the population quickly.”

Harbor seals pup off the coast of Maine starting in June and return to the Cape in the fall. The seals around the Cape now are mostly the larger (500-880 pound) gray seals. The No. 1 breeding spot in world for gray seals is now Muskeget Island in Nantucket Sound.


That’s remarkable considering there were virtually no gray seals in Massachusetts 50 years ago. Now there are 30,000 to 50,000 swimming around Cape Cod, according to Shelley Dawicki of the NOAA Fisheries Science Center.

“The bounties stopped (1962 in Massachusetts, 1945 in Maine) and the Marine Mammal Protection Act was passed in 1972,” Dawicki noted. “After that the seals started to gradually return from the north.”

The harbor seals returned first in number by the 1980s but gray seals remained rare as their refuge was the more distant Sable Island, far off Nova Scotia. The first five gray seal pups were recorded on Musketget Island in 1988.

Seal counts at Muskeget rose from 2,010 in 1994 to 15,756 in 2011. On Cape the population now is greatest around the Monomoy Wild Life Refuge but the seals, like the sharks, are everywhere and growing in numbers on the Outer and Upper Cape.

“The gray seals are here year round,” Dawicki said. “They pup in December and January. They like to haul out on the sand. Jeremy point in Wellfleet and Chatham have lots of seals. The harbor seals are smaller (150-250 pounds) and you see them on jetties on Nantucket and Woods Hole.”

NOAA has a seal tagging program to try to track where the go. They will swim quite far out to sea so they are not always inshore feeding along the beaches, and seals from the Cape can mingle with seals from infected populations further north.

Dawicki pointed out that while shark sightings are up so are the number of people looking, and the sharks, as well as seals prior to the bounties, have always been around.


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